Dana Porter Library, first floor
University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ LibraryÌý
À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ, OntarioÌýN2LÌý3G1Ìý
519-888-4567Ìýx42619 or x42445
In 1854, William Brown, Ashley Hibbard and George Bourn met in Montreal to start Brown, Hubbard, Bourn & Co., the first manufacturer of Caoutchouc (Indian rubber) footwear in Canada. Several mergers and acquisitions later, they became the Dominion Rubber Company in 1910, and in 1912 built the Dominion Tire factory in Berlin (now Kitchener) to meet the new demand for automobile tires.
In 1917, an integral part of the Dominion Tire factory was opened, the (RMS). Built next to Dominion Tire for the express purpose of creating machines for use in the factory, the Rubber Machinery Shops (RMS) designed and manufactured machines for use in the rubber industry (and eventually many others) at this location until 2009. RMS donated their archives to the University of À¶Ý®ÊÓÆµ Library in 2010.
Included in the RMS donation were issues of the Dominion Rubber Company magazine, The Dominion, from 1942 to 1957.
During World War II, Dominion Rubber supplied the military with gas masks and gas-proof clothing; the masks were also intended for general civilian use.
The Dominion: February-March 1943, v. 2 no. 1
The Dominion: February-March 1943, v. 2 no. 1
The Dominion: February-March 1943, v. 2 no. 1
The Dominion: August 1943, v. 2 no. 3
The Dominion: August 1943, v. 2 no. 3
The Dominion: April 1944, v. 3 no. 2
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